Frustrations Communicating with Your Pharmacy Staff


Co-mmuni-cat-ion.  Com-munic-at-ion. I started having a good look at my own communication issues recently when I was feeling frustrated with things falling through the cracks in my pharmacist recruiting business.  Some things I envisioned being done a certain way ended up being done a different way.  Recently, an email I sent to a team member about a request was interpreted in a different way than I intended & it got us both extremely frustrated.  My communication challenges were driving me nuts.  There’s nothing I hate more than things impacting the level of service that pharmacists need attention to with their job search.

I was determined to figure out how to solve the challenges I was having. Looking into it, I noticed that sometimes, things I clearly stated one way were being interpreted in another.  Then there were times when things I unclearly said were unclearly getting interpreted (imagine that!).  If I got lucky, sometimes people read my mind just fine.

I tried to figure out how I could solve the problem, and while doing so, I stayed up all night reading about communication one night.  Here are some straight no BS tips I learned (and from my personal experiences) that you can use in your pharmacy/department:

1. Don’t be hard on yourself or on the other person when a communication breakdown happens and you’re frustrated. Realize that communication issues happen when the steps that contribute to communication are skipped.  Also, people interpret you from their own “world”, and even if you communicate clearly and they seem to understand exactly as you said, there is still a chance for miscommunication to happen.  Take a step back and evaluate what you may have contributed to the issue.

2. Communication = someone expressing themselves + someone interpreting that expression. Happiness for communicator= someone communicating + being understood the way they want.  Happiness for recipient= Receiving what was being said + having the info with as little judgment as possible +a way to respond and express their understanding.

3. No BS lessons/tips to make life easier: Read more

Motivating Your Pharmacy Staff Who Aren’t Performing to Their Potential

Are you tired of figuring out a way to motivate your pharmacy staff who are underperforming, or who are visibly demotivated?

What if you didn’t have to pull your hair out anymore, and could easily inspire your staff to exceed their potential?

You can improve productivity and increase your pharmacy staff’s motivation by taking a proactive approach to the situation. Create a more dynamic team with this two-tiered plan. First, set the tone for positive change and to decrease obstacles. Second, bring a plan to motivate your staff to the next level.

Here are some ideas you can implement now to achieve this:

Step 1: Share your vision for the pharmacy openly and frequently. Share your 1-mo, quaterly, annual, or 5-yr vision at staff meetings.  Ask your staff what role they’d have an interest in playing with helping you reach your vision.  In sharing your vision, share your specific goals as well.  Instead of general goals such as “improve patient care” or “decrease wait time” give specific goals that are measurable, such as “decrease wait time by 20 min”.

Step 2: Provide clear channels of communication. Include regular time when your staff gets 1-on-1 time with you aside from performance reviews or team meetings.   This time is best used to proactively encourage their growth as a pharmacist/tech, discuss challenges, and listen to the solutions they have to offer.

Clear communication when policy changes are made. When policy change are made, include your whole staff on those changes.  This includes contract pharmacists who may not always attend your staff meetings.  Provide them with an agenda that includes outcomes of those staff meetings and ask them to sign the agenda to acknowledge reading it.

Step 3: Set the stage for a more defined work flow by choosing structure over “wherever you’re needed”. Rather than letting your staff pharmacists & technicians choose where among the workflow to help out, have a structured workflow that lays out who is to do what when.  Delegate responsibility that includes checklists (this can apply well to technicians).  Some pharmacies allow pharmacists to float between screening & verifying/counseling without a set schedule.

The drawback to this is that some pharmacists may have a preference for one type of responsibility over another and engage primarily in that responsibility.  This can create resentment among your staff, because those who may not be as assertive may end up feeling “stuck” doing responsibilities that the other staff doesn’t like to do.

Of course, instill the culture in your staff to help each other out when they’re backed up, but give your staff clear expectations of their roles.

Next month, we’ll introduce a plan for inspiring your pharmacists to want to perform at the next level.